VOA慢速英语2011--Young Navajos Leave Reservation Life Beh
时间:2018-12-16 作者:英语课 分类:2011年VOA慢速英语(七)月
AMERICAN MOSAIC 1 - Young Navajos Leave Reservation Life Behind for Jobs
DOUG JOHNSON: Welcome to AMERICAN MOSAIC in VOA Special English.
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I'm Doug Johnson. This week on our show we play new music by Sarah Jarosz …
And we answer a question about coal mining in America …
But, first we travel to the Navajo Nation in the American Southwest to learn more about its shrinking population.
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Young Navajos Leaving Navajo Nation
DOUG JOHNSON: The two thousand ten nationwide population study in the United States shows continuous growth in America’s minority population. Native American populations in the Southwest are among the expanding groups. However, the largest American Indian reservation in the country shrank in population by three percent. We visited a town in the huge Navajo Nation to find out where people were going. Jim Tedder 2 has the story.
JIM TEDDER: Ganado, Arizona, is in the central part of the sixty-seven thousand square kilometer Navajo Nation reservation.
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The inside of Ganado High School is busy with children hurrying to classes. But the rooms are not nearly as crowded as they once were. Principal Tom Rowland says he is losing about one hundred students a year.
TOM ROWLAND: "I’m looking at a school that in the mid-two thousands ran about eight hundred fifty students. And now were down to about five hundred seventy-five to five hundred eighty.”
Evelyn Begay has worked in the school district for twenty-eight years. She thinks she knows why the population is falling in Ganado schools.
EVELYN BEGAY: “Families can’t find jobs here. They go to the urban areas to look for employment, and that’s where they move their families.”
Ms. Begay has five adult children herself. All went to Ganado High School. They each attended Arizona State University, in Phoenix 3. And all five stayed in the Phoenix area after they graduated.
EVELYN BEGAY: “Even though you hear politicians say we’re going to build jobs, we’ve heard that fifty years, and we haven’t seen any significant impact on employment for our young people. And as long as that’s continuing, we’re going to continue to lose our families, our children, to move away.”
Strong winds blow across the one highway that passes through Ganado. There are few local industries in town. The largest employers are the hospital and the school system. That is why the teachers and administrators 4 at the high school advise students to leave the reservation after graduation. Nathan Brady is on the staff at Ganado High School.
NATHAN BRADY: “Every one of them is going to encourage them, ‘Go. Go. Get an education, get a job.’”
Then when they have their university degree, he says there is no reason to return.
NATHAN BRADY: “They look back, and there’s nothing here. There’s nothing for them to build on. There’s no employment so they stay out there.”
That is what Nathan Brady did himself. He graduated from Ganado twenty years ago and joined the Navy. But just recently he returned to the reservation although he had been offered a duty station on the island state of Hawaii.
NATHAN BRADY: “I’d rather be out here to see the stars at night, I’d rather be out here to hear the birds chirping 5. I knew I wanted to come back.”
A lot of young Navajo feel the same. The reservation is far from city life and the economy is lacking, but it is still home. Marden Kinlichee is one of them.
MARDEN KINLICHEE: “I think a lot of kids do want to come back. It’s just that if they come back, then they’re going to be stuck at home not working.”
But Marden Kinlichee has a plan for her return. She just graduated from Ganado High School and leaves for New Mexico in August. She plans to study nursing at the University of New Mexico, in Gallup. She knows she can find a nursing job near home when she graduates. She says she can help her people that way.
MARDEN KINLICHEE: “That’s how I was raised, to come back and help my grandparents. We need a lot of help out here.”
The Navajo Nation population is getting older. More than sixty-five percent of the population is over eighteen years old. That is up seven percent from ten years ago.
But people in Ganado are not that worried about what many people call the “brain drain.” They believe the land, culture and language will bring their young back when they are ready.
Coal Mining in the US
DOUG JOHNSON: Our listener question this week comes from Mongolia. Tsogt Sharav has been listening to VOA Special English since two thousand four and wants to know more about coal mining in the United States.
The United States produces about half of its electric power from coal. America is the second-largest producer of coal after China. Coal is mined in half the states, but Wyoming mines the most, followed by West Virginia, Kentucky and Pennsylvania.
The United States gets about two-thirds of its coal from surface mining rather than underground mining. Surface mining is the name for different methods that are used to remove coal that is less than sixty meters underground.
The United States has about eighty-seven thousand coal miners. The jobs pay well, especially for the poor communities where mines are often located. But the job can also be dangerous.
The government says more than one hundred thousand miners were killed between nineteen hundred and last year. Coal mining deaths have decreased sharply. But last year forty-eight miners were killed. Twenty-nine of them died in an explosion at an underground mine in West Virginia on April fifth, twenty-ten. It was the deadliest coal mining disaster in the United States in forty years.
This week, a federal agency, the Mine Safety and Health Administration, released findings from its investigation 6. It says the explosion at the Upper Big Branch mine could have been prevented.
The agency says there was a huge coal dust explosion that started with a limited amount of natural gas. It says the methane 7 was likely ignited by mining equipment.
Massey Energy owned the mine. It blamed the explosion on a sudden release of a large amount of natural gas that could not have been prevented.
Mine safety agency official Kevin Stricklin says Massey kept two sets of records to try to hide safety problems from inspectors 8.
A final report from the agency is expected later this year. A criminal investigation by the Justice Department continues. Massey is now owned by another company, Alpha Natural Resources.
Sarah Jarosz
DOUG JOHNSON: Twenty-year old Sarah Jarosz is a singer, songwriter and musician. She plays the guitar and other instruments, including the mandolin and banjo. Her music has a strong American bluegrass influence.
Sarah Jarosz just released her second album. With this album, she moves beyond bluegrass to explore other musical sounds. Critics say she is one of the most promising 9 young singer-songwriters at work today. Barbara Klein has more.
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BARBARA KLEIN: That was the song “Run Away” from Sarah Jarosz’ new album “Follow Me Down.”
Sarah Jarosz grew up in the town of Wimberly, Texas, near Austin. At the age of ten Sarah began playing the mandolin. Soon, she began to perform at bluegrass festivals.
Sarah Jarosz’ first album, “Song Up in Her Head,” came out in two thousand nine. It was heavily influenced by traditional bluegrass music. She is now studying music at the New England Conservatory 10 in Boston. She has said her studies have helped her to push her musical boundaries.
Sarah Jarosz wrote nearly all of the songs on the new album. She performs two works by other artists, including Bob Dylan. Here is her version of “The Tourist” by the British rock band Radiohead.
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Sarah Jarosz asked many top musicians to perform with her on this album. Here, she sings and plays mandolin with star banjo player Bela Fleck 11. We leave you with “Come Around.”
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DOUG JOHNSON: I’m Doug Johnson. Our program was written by Chris Cruise, Dana Demange and Caty Weaver 12, who was also the producer. Join us again next week for AMERICAN MOSAIC in VOA Special English.
- The sky this morning is a mosaic of blue and white.今天早上的天空是幅蓝白相间的画面。
- The image mosaic is a troublesome work.图象镶嵌是个麻烦的工作。
- Jim Tedder has more. 吉姆?特德将给我们做更多的介绍。 来自互联网
- Jim Tedder tells us more. 吉姆?泰德给我们带来更详细的报道。 来自互联网
- The airline rose like a phoenix from the ashes.这家航空公司又起死回生了。
- The phoenix worship of China is fetish worship not totem adoration.中国凤崇拜是灵物崇拜而非图腾崇拜。
- He had administrators under him but took the crucial decisions himself. 他手下有管理人员,但重要的决策仍由他自己来做。 来自辞典例句
- Administrators have their own methods of social intercourse. 办行政的人有他们的社交方式。 来自汉英文学 - 围城
- The birds,chirping relentlessly,woke us up at daybreak. 破晓时鸟儿不断吱吱地叫,把我们吵醒了。
- The birds are chirping merrily. 鸟儿在欢快地鸣叫着。
- In an investigation,a new fact became known, which told against him.在调查中新发现了一件对他不利的事实。
- He drew the conclusion by building on his own investigation.他根据自己的调查研究作出结论。
- The blast was caused by pockets of methane gas that ignited.爆炸是由数袋甲烷气体着火引起的。
- Methane may have extraterrestrial significance.甲烷具有星际意义。
- They got into the school in the guise of inspectors. 他们假装成视察员进了学校。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- Inspectors checked that there was adequate ventilation. 检查员已检查过,通风良好。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- The results of the experiments are very promising.实验的结果充满了希望。
- We're trying to bring along one or two promising young swimmers.我们正设法培养出一两名有前途的年轻游泳选手。
- At the conservatory,he learned how to score a musical composition.在音乐学校里,他学会了怎样谱曲。
- The modern conservatory is not an environment for nurturing plants.这个现代化温室的环境不适合培育植物。